Food/Intro

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Many people believe that we are soon to face a global food shortage. Population is rising rapidly, with a billion people added in less than ten years, and rainforests must be cut down to make room for more farming to grow food for these people. Meanwhile, 40% of farming land has been depleted 11px-Wikipedia_logo.jpg. People are moving from farms into cities at the rate of over a million a week [1], and their appetite for meat is growing[2]. These trends means that food demand is rising, but there are fewer farmers to supply it. It would indeed seem that we are heading for a food crisis.

But this analysis misses a key point: that there are far more efficient ways to produce food than the ones now in wide use. Any food shortage is really a shortage of applying know-how to food production. In the case of soil depletion, for example, while it is true that certain farming methods deplete soil, there are other methods (like permaculture, discussed below) that rapidly and reliably increase the fertility of the soil.

Abundance of agricultural resources

The world currently produces ample food for everyone — over 2700 calories per person per day [3]. Our agricultural productivity has consistently increased at a rate faster than our population, with a 17% increase in calories per person in the past 30 years, despite a 70% increase in population.

Food production depends on time, incentive, genetic diversity of seeds and livestock, soil (or nutrients), water, land and access to technology and to information. Of these, none has a hard limit except for land —

This planet currently has 31.8 trillion m2, of arable land 11px-Wikipedia_logo.jpg. This can be greatly expanded if necessary by irrigating deserts and introducing sustainable farming practices that rehabilitate soil. (For example, 3 billion m2 of land in Niger was reclaimed for farming recently[4].) The UN estimates 41.4 trillion m2 available for non-irrigated agriculture alone [5].

However, improving food supply has much more to do with increasing the yield of existing farmland than creating new farmland [6]. This is because the system of agriculture makes a huge difference to the amount of land needed; the average Canadian requires over 12,000m2 [7], while permaculture systems regularly produce enough food for a person on less than than 400m2. This means our 31.8 trillion m2 can grow enough food for 79.5 billion people, well over ten times the current world population.

To sustain a growing population in a way that is viable in the long-term, what we need is sustainable intensification [8][9][10]. This refers to a method of agriculture that gives higher yields than industrial monoculture, has less impact on the environment, uses less water and requires fewer inputs. Happily, sustainable agricultural practices also tend to be more productive than non-sustainable ones. An analysis of 286 sustainable farming projects in the developing world found that yields doubled for most plants [11].

Sustainable intensification is being implemented all over the world, with a 50% increase in four years [12], and with entire countries like Cuba and Bhutan moving to sustainable systems. Several practises that may lead to sustainable intensification are explored below.